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#1
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Hello everyone,
During the first year of my 40-gallon planted aquarium, my plants looked great. In particular, I had a huge, beautiful Echinodorus. My other plants were also thriving. In fact, at times I could actually see streams of tiny bubbles coming out of them. I assume it was oxygen, which I took as a sign of good health. Unfortunately, they haven't done this in a long time, and they don't look nearly as good as before (that was maybe two years ago). If the bubbles were indeed a sign that the plants were thriving and producing great amounts of oxygen, what could explain their current situation? What puzzles me is that I'm actually taking better care of my plants for the last year or so. I've been adding fertilizer on a regular basis (but not too often or too much), and I recently started adding CO2. I've also always made sure I changed my fluorescent tube often enough so the light quality wouldn't go down too much. Ok, so I only have one main light for a 40-gallon aquarium with a large surface area, which isn't enough, but the situation was the same when my plants were doing better. Is there anything that could explain my plants' decreased health under improved conditions? My old Echinodorus was 4 times the size of those I have now, and it didn't tend to turn yellow or brown or lose leaves like the current ones do. The situation is similar for other species. Could it be that I now have too many plants? I'm pretty sure I have more now than 2 years ago. Are they competing with each other or something? I realize that it could be any number of things, but any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. Francois |
#2
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Echinodorus species like substrate fertilisation very very much. Adding an
iron/N:P:K root tab might help. Store bought plants in good condition tend to store a few weeks supply of nutrients and the addition of fertilizers will keep them bubbling for a while under ideal conditions. A stream of tiny bubbles from just one or even a few spots on a plant could signify a damaged part of a leaf or a disintegrating one. If the plant has decreased in size, I really think lack of light is the limiting factor to start off with. An increased/growing fish load will reduce the oxygen saturation ablility of the tank over time, ie a few tetras/cories to start off with take up less oxygen than a big oscar or lots of angelfish or gigantic bristlenose catfish which will consume lots of oxygen thus no visible bubbles from plants. I've no idea at what point oxygen levels signify true pearling from plants in tanks, but I think it's around 80%(someone correct me). IME an unpruned tank will allow plants to cover the surface or even just taking up space in the middle of the tank ie pennywort, or heaps of baby echinodorus' growing from a few runners from the one plant *significantly* reduces growth/pearling of the mother/substrate lying plants from lack of light even with 4 tubes over a 65G. "François Arsenault" wrote in message . .. Hello everyone, During the first year of my 40-gallon planted aquarium, my plants looked great. In particular, I had a huge, beautiful Echinodorus. My other plants were also thriving. In fact, at times I could actually see streams of tiny bubbles coming out of them. I assume it was oxygen, which I took as a sign of good health. Unfortunately, they haven't done this in a long time, and they don't look nearly as good as before (that was maybe two years ago). If the bubbles were indeed a sign that the plants were thriving and producing great amounts of oxygen, what could explain their current situation? What puzzles me is that I'm actually taking better care of my plants for the last year or so. I've been adding fertilizer on a regular basis (but not too often or too much), and I recently started adding CO2. I've also always made sure I changed my fluorescent tube often enough so the light quality wouldn't go down too much. Ok, so I only have one main light for a 40-gallon aquarium with a large surface area, which isn't enough, but the situation was the same when my plants were doing better. Is there anything that could explain my plants' decreased health under improved conditions? My old Echinodorus was 4 times the size of those I have now, and it didn't tend to turn yellow or brown or lose leaves like the current ones do. The situation is similar for other species. Could it be that I now have too many plants? I'm pretty sure I have more now than 2 years ago. Are they competing with each other or something? I realize that it could be any number of things, but any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. Francois |
#3
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From: "Tasslehoff"
Echinodorus species like substrate fertilisation very very much. Adding an iron/N:P:K root tab might help. Would adding liquid NPK fertilizer help too? In any case, I'm kind of wary of adding phosphorous (phophates) to my aquarium, seeing as I already have algae problems. In fact, I think I have brush algae on the plants. Nasty stuff. And I can't seem to find real siamese algae eaters around here. False siamensis, yes, but not the real thing. I have no idea where I could buy some here in Canada. Perhaps I'm mistaken and adding NPK wouldn't cause any trouble. Maybe I can control the algae by changing my tube. Someone once told me that Hagen's Power-Glo, while good for plants, promotes algae growth. That might explain why I have more algae than I used to, since I used other types of tubes in the past. Adding fertilizer directly into the substrate seems like a very good idea. However, I didn't have that when my plants, including the Echinodorus, were doing great. I wonder what's different now. A stream of tiny bubbles from just one or even a few spots on a plant could signify a damaged part of a leaf or a disintegrating one. Oh. I thought it meant that a plant was doing so well and producing so much oxygen that you could actually see it as a bubble stream. So you're saying that the oxygen bubbles don't mean that they're doing really well so much as that there's a lot of oxygen in the water in general? Like the way people sweat more when it's really humid outside? If the plant has decreased in size, I really think lack of light is the limiting factor to start off with. I'm definitely going to do something about that soon. I'm really tired about the lack of light, not only for my plants but also for the so-so effect on the fish. There's only a very small area where they look nice, the light refleclting on them in a pleasant way. Elsewhere they look rather dull, unless I move the lamp around. The difference is obvious. Two lamps, one more to the front and one more to the back, would probably help both the fauna and flora of my aquarium. In the case of the faune it would be more a matter of aesthetics, not health, but it counts. An increased/growing fish load will reduce the oxygen saturation ablility of the tank over time I've always had a fairly heavy fish load. At times I've had over 60 fish for 40 gallons. Of course, almost all of them were very small fish, like neons, but still. Right now I have maybe 40 small fish, plus a pair of medium-sized pearl gouramis. IME an unpruned tank will allow plants to cover the surface or even just taking up space in the middle of the tank ie pennywort, or heaps of baby echinodorus' growing from a few runners from the one plant *significantly* reduces growth/pearling of the mother/substrate lying plants from lack of light even with 4 tubes over a 65G. Hmm...I'll keep that in mind when I redo my aquarium and add more lights in the near future. Thank you very much for the information. I appreciate it. Francois |
#4
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I bet your lights are falling off....
-- RedForeman ©® "François Arsenault" wrote in message . .. Hello everyone, During the first year of my 40-gallon planted aquarium, my plants looked great. In particular, I had a huge, beautiful Echinodorus. My other plants were also thriving. In fact, at times I could actually see streams of tiny bubbles coming out of them. I assume it was oxygen, which I took as a sign of good health. Unfortunately, they haven't done this in a long time, and they don't look nearly as good as before (that was maybe two years ago). If the bubbles were indeed a sign that the plants were thriving and producing great amounts of oxygen, what could explain their current situation? What puzzles me is that I'm actually taking better care of my plants for the last year or so. I've been adding fertilizer on a regular basis (but not too often or too much), and I recently started adding CO2. I've also always made sure I changed my fluorescent tube often enough so the light quality wouldn't go down too much. Ok, so I only have one main light for a 40-gallon aquarium with a large surface area, which isn't enough, but the situation was the same when my plants were doing better. Is there anything that could explain my plants' decreased health under improved conditions? My old Echinodorus was 4 times the size of those I have now, and it didn't tend to turn yellow or brown or lose leaves like the current ones do. The situation is similar for other species. Could it be that I now have too many plants? I'm pretty sure I have more now than 2 years ago. Are they competing with each other or something? I realize that it could be any number of things, but any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. Francois |
#5
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"RedForeman ©®" wrote:
I bet your lights are falling off.... I bet you are right, Red. I could have written the original message: Great growth during year 1, increasing frustration during year 2 despite improving skill and discipline, replaced the lamps and all was well again. François, replace your lamps and keep up the CO2! -- RedForeman ©® "François Arsenault" wrote in message . .. Hello everyone, During the first year of my 40-gallon planted aquarium, my plants looked great. In particular, I had a huge, beautiful Echinodorus. My other plants were also thriving. In fact, at times I could actually see streams of tiny bubbles coming out of them. I assume it was oxygen, which I took as a sign of good health. Unfortunately, they haven't done this in a long time, and they don't look nearly as good as before (that was maybe two years ago). If the bubbles were indeed a sign that the plants were thriving and producing great amounts of oxygen, what could explain their current situation? What puzzles me is that I'm actually taking better care of my plants for the last year or so. I've been adding fertilizer on a regular basis (but not too often or too much), and I recently started adding CO2. I've also always made sure I changed my fluorescent tube often enough so the light quality wouldn't go down too much. Ok, so I only have one main light for a 40-gallon aquarium with a large surface area, which isn't enough, but the situation was the same when my plants were doing better. Is there anything that could explain my plants' decreased health under improved conditions? My old Echinodorus was 4 times the size of those I have now, and it didn't tend to turn yellow or brown or lose leaves like the current ones do. The situation is similar for other species. Could it be that I now have too many plants? I'm pretty sure I have more now than 2 years ago. Are they competing with each other or something? I realize that it could be any number of things, but any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. Francois |
#6
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speaking from recent experience... same happened to me a month ago...
sharing the knowledge.... Dave, does flourite go bad after 2 years? I'm breaking that tank down and transferring it and it's residents to a 55g, will be getting another bag to fill up.... -- RedForeman ©® "Dave Millman" wrote in message ... "RedForeman ©®" wrote: I bet your lights are falling off.... I bet you are right, Red. I could have written the original message: Great growth during year 1, increasing frustration during year 2 despite improving skill and discipline, replaced the lamps and all was well again. François, replace your lamps and keep up the CO2! -- RedForeman ©® "François Arsenault" wrote in message . .. Hello everyone, During the first year of my 40-gallon planted aquarium, my plants looked great. In particular, I had a huge, beautiful Echinodorus. My other plants were also thriving. In fact, at times I could actually see streams of tiny bubbles coming out of them. I assume it was oxygen, which I took as a sign of good health. Unfortunately, they haven't done this in a long time, and they don't look nearly as good as before (that was maybe two years ago). If the bubbles were indeed a sign that the plants were thriving and producing great amounts of oxygen, what could explain their current situation? What puzzles me is that I'm actually taking better care of my plants for the last year or so. I've been adding fertilizer on a regular basis (but not too often or too much), and I recently started adding CO2. I've also always made sure I changed my fluorescent tube often enough so the light quality wouldn't go down too much. Ok, so I only have one main light for a 40-gallon aquarium with a large surface area, which isn't enough, but the situation was the same when my plants were doing better. Is there anything that could explain my plants' decreased health under improved conditions? My old Echinodorus was 4 times the size of those I have now, and it didn't tend to turn yellow or brown or lose leaves like the current ones do. The situation is similar for other species. Could it be that I now have too many plants? I'm pretty sure I have more now than 2 years ago. Are they competing with each other or something? I realize that it could be any number of things, but any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. Francois |
#7
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RedForeman ©® wrote in message
... speaking from recent experience... same happened to me a month ago... sharing the knowledge.... Dave, does flourite go bad after 2 years? I'm breaking that tank down and transferring it and it's residents to a 55g, will be getting another bag to fill up.... Flourite itself should be inert, however toxins build up in the substrate over time and closed systems deteriorate... an argument in favor of ugf's, incidentally. kush |
#8
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![]() "Dunter Powries" wrote in message ... RedForeman ©® wrote in message ... speaking from recent experience... same happened to me a month ago... sharing the knowledge.... Dave, does flourite go bad after 2 years? I'm breaking that tank down and transferring it and it's residents to a 55g, will be getting another bag to fill up.... Flourite itself should be inert, however toxins build up in the substrate over time and closed systems deteriorate... an argument in favor of ugf's, incidentally. kush Also an argument for substrate heating cables. Harry -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#9
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"Dave Millman" wrote in message
... "RedForeman ©®" wrote: I bet your lights are falling off.... I bet you are right, Red. I could have written the original message: Great growth during year 1, increasing frustration during year 2 despite improving skill and discipline, replaced the lamps and all was well again. François, replace your lamps and keep up the CO2! I'm definitely keeping up the CO2 injection, though I need to get a special timer to turn the airstone on and off at appropriate moments, otherwise my fish visibly become oxygen-starved. Doing it manually isn't very convenient. As for the lamps, it's certainly good advice, but as I mentioned in another post in this thread (just added it), I changed my tube about 3 months ago. Unless it's defective, it should still be fine. At least I think so. However, I do need to add a second lamp. Thank you for the reply. Francois |
#10
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"François Arsenault" wrote in
: I'm definitely keeping up the CO2 injection, though I need to get a special timer to turn the airstone on and off at appropriate moments, otherwise my fish visibly become oxygen-starved. Doing it manually isn't very convenient. What I did is this: I made a little CO2 reactor using an old gravelvac and an Aquaclear 201 powerhead. At the top of the reactor (Higher than the powerhead output!) I rilled a little hole, just a pinprick really. Then I plugged the powerhead into the timer the lights are on. The CO2 supply is constant, but it only gets fully disspolved when the lights are on. Otherwise, it bubbles out through the hole. ~Empty -- 'You're not friends. You'll never be friends. You'll be in love till it kills you both. You'll fight, and you'll shag, and you'll hate each other till it makes you quiver, but you'll never be friends. Love isn't brains, children, it's blood... blood screaming inside you to work its will. I may be love's bitch, but at least I'm man enough to admit it.' Spike |
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